The new fund, called “10100” (pronounced “ten-one-hundred”), will target job-creating companies in the real estate and e-commerce spaces, the ex-Uber CEO said in a tweet Wednesday: Some news… pic.twitter.com/urFBrb9aCV — travis kalanick (@travisk) March 7, 2018 The responses to the tweet are piling up on Twitter. Show More Summary

Nine months after Travis Kalanick was forced to resign from Uber, he has a new project on the way: a job creation fund called 10100, named after his home address in Los Angeles. On Wednesday Kalanick tweeted that his “Ten One Hundred”...Show More Summary

There’s life after Uber for Travis Kalanick. The ride-hailing giant’s co-founder and controversial former chief executive tweeted Wednesday that he will start an investment fund called 10100. “Over the past few months I’ve started thinking about what’s next,” Kalanick wrote. “I’ve begun making...

Uber's embattled cofounder and ex-CEO Travis Kalanick has found his next gig.
Kalanick, who sat at the helm of the ride-hailing app until getting pushed on in June, announced a new venture capital fund on Wednesday called "10100."
The...Show More Summary

Fresh off a public spat between Uber investor Benchmark Capital and former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick, Benchmark general partner Bill Gurley took the stage in front of a large room of bankerfolk at the Goldman Sachs Internet and Technology...Show More Summary

In September 2015, at the height of San Francisco’s Indian Summer, then-Uber CEO Travis Kalanick sat beside Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff in front of a crowd of tens of thousands, on a stage erected in the middle of a closed-off street...Show More Summary

Travis Kalanick took a back seat at Uber last year, but he was back in the hot seat this week. The former Uber CEO, who was forced out under pressure from investors, was the main attraction at the trial in Waymo v. Uber. Google's self-driving car division claims Uber......

Just before noon on Tuesday, former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick stood before the tall wooden double doors of a federal courtroom in San Francisco.
As he blithely chatted with a pair of familiar national journalists, his personal council, former U.S. Show More Summary

Former Uber chief executive Travis Kalanick on Wednesday denied conspiring to steal autonomous driving technology in a tense courtroom appearance that could be key to a blockbuster trial over allegedly ill-gotten trade secrets.

Uber is accused of stealing trade secrets from Google's self-driving car company, Waymo. Former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick was in court Wednesday, the star witness in a trial that could shape the industry. CBS News correspondent John Blackstone reports.

Travis Kalanick, the former CEO of ride-hailing app Uber, let out some laughs, reminisced about old colleagues, and shared his awe over flying cars during several hours of questioning in a San Francisco courtroom this week.
Quick overview:...Show More Summary

Greed, cheat codes, bad acts, disappearing messages, memory problems and a mysterious entreaty to “burn the village.” Just another day in Silicon Valley’s sensational trade-secrets trial. Uber-co founder Travis Kalanick returned to the witness stand Wednesday in the Waymo-Uber trial in U.S. District...

Uber and Waymo is in court this week, battling over allegations that Uber stole trade secrets. But something else is also on trial: Travis Kalanick’s questionable slang.
The private texts and emails of the former Uber CEO have been endlessly...Show More Summary

Before they were enemies, Google and Uber were more than friends. Google was a big early investor in Uber.
Kalanick described his early relationship with Google founder Larry Page as little brother/big brother.
And then he discussedShow More Summary